4.6 Article

Timing and Potential Causes of 19th-Century Glacier Advances in Coastal Alaska Based on Tree-Ring Dating and Historical Accounts

Journal

FRONTIERS IN EARTH SCIENCE
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/feart.2019.00082

Keywords

glaciers; dendrochronology; Little Ice Age; Southeastern Alaska; St. Elias Mountains; climate change

Funding

  1. US National Park Service
  2. Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory Climate Center Postdoctoral Fellowship
  3. National Geographic Project [CP4-151R-18]
  4. US National Science Foundation [OISE-1743738, OPP-1203271, PLR-15-04134]
  5. [PLR-16-03473]
  6. [AGS - 15-02150]
  7. [AGS -15-02186]

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The Little Ice Age (LIA), ca. CE 1250-1850, was a cold period of global extent, with the nature and timing of reduced temperatures varying by region. The Gulf of Alaska (GOA) is a key location to study the climatic drivers of glacier fluctuations during the LIA because dendrochronological techniques can provide precise ages of ice advances and retreats. Here, we use dendrochronology to date the most recent advance of La Perouse Glacier in the Fairweather Range of Southeast Alaska. After maintaining a relatively contracted state since at least CE 1200, La Perouse advanced to its maximum LIA position between CE 1850 and 1895. Like many other glaciers bordering the GOA, the La Perouse Glacier reached this maximum position relatively late in the LIA compared with glaciers in other regions. This is curious because reconstructions of paleoclimate in the GOA region indicate the 19th century was not the coldest period of the LIA. Using newly available paleoclimate data, we hypothesize that a combination of moderately cool summers accompanying the Dalton Solar Minimum and exceptionally snowy winters associated with a strengthened Aleutian Low could have caused these relatively late LIA advances. Such a scenario implies that winter climate processes, which are heavily influenced by ocean-atmospheric variability in the North Pacific region, have modulated these coastal glaciers' sensitivity to shifts in summer temperatures.

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